3.2 Energy flows through ecosystems

Transcription

1 3.2 Energy flows through ecosystems Printed Page 60 [Notes/Highlighting] To understand how ecosystems function and how to best protect and manage them, ecosystem ecologists study not only the biotic and abiotic components that define an ecosystem, but also the processes that move energy and matter within it. Plants absorb energy directly from the Sun. That energy is then spread throughout an ecosystem as herbivores (animals that eat plants) feed on plants and carnivores (animals that eat other animals) feed on herbivores. Consider the Serengeti Plain in East Africa, shown in FIGURE 3.3. There are millions of herbivores, such as zebras and wildebeests, in the Serengeti ecosystem, but far fewer carnivores, such as lions (Panthera leo) and cheetahs (Acinonyx jubatus), that feed on those herbivores. In accordance with the second law of thermodynamics, when one organism consumes another, not all of the energy in the consumed organism is transferred to the consumer. Some of that energy is lost as heat. Therefore, all the carnivores in an area contain less energy than all the herbivores in the same area because all the energy going to the carnivores must come from the animals they eat. To better understand these energy relationships, let s trace this energy flow in more detail. Figure 3.3 Serengeti Plain of Africa. The Serengeti ecosystem has more plants than herbivores, and more herbivores than carnivores. Previous Section Next Section

2 3.2.1 Photosynthesis and Respiration Nearly all of the energy that powers ecosystems comes from the Sun as solar energy, which is a form of kinetic energy. Plants, algae, and other organisms that use the Sun s energy to produce usable forms of energy are called producers, or autotrophs. Through the process of photosynthesis, producers use solar energy to convert carbon dioxide (CO 2 ) and water (H 2 O) into glucose (C 6 H 12 O 6 ), a form of potential energy that can be used by a wide range of organisms. As we can see in FIGURE 3.4, the process also produces oxygen (O 2 ) as a waste product. That is why plants and other producers are beneficial to our atmosphere: they produce the oxygen we need to breathe. Printed Page 60 [Notes/Highlighting] Producers use the glucose they produce by photosynthesis to store energy and to build structures such as leaves, stems, and roots. Other organisms, such as the herbivores on the Serengeti Plain, eat the tissues of producers and gain energy from the chemical energy contained in those tissues. They do this through cellular respiration, a process that unlocks the chemical energy stored in the cells of organisms. Respiration is the opposite of photosynthesis: cells convert glucose and oxygen into energy, carbon dioxide, and water. In essence, they run photosynthesis backward to recover the solar energy stored in glucose. All organisms including producers carry out respiration to fuel their own metabolism and growth. Thus producers both produce and consume oxygen. When the Sun is shining and photosynthesis occurs, producers generate more oxygen via photosynthesis than they consume via respiration, and there is a net production of oxygen. At night, producers only respire, consuming oxygen without generating it. Overall, producers photosynthesize more than they respire. The net effect is an excess of oxygen that is released into the air and an excess of carbon that is stored in the tissues of producers. Figure 3.4 Photosynthesis and respiration. Photosynthesis is a process by which producers use solar energy to convert carbon dioxide and water into glucose and oxygen. Respiration is a process by which organisms convert glucose and oxygen into water and carbon dioxide, releasing the energy needed to live, grow, and reproduce. All organisms, including producers, perform respiration. Previous Section Next Section

3 3.2.2 Trophic Levels, Food Chains, and Food Webs Unlike producers, which make their own food, consumers, or heterotrophs, are incapable of photosynthesis and must obtain their energy by consuming other organisms. In FIGURE 3.5, we can see that heterotrophs fall into several different categories. Heterotrophs that consume producers are called herbivores or primary consumers. Primary consumers include a variety of familiar plant- and algae-eating animals, such as zebras, grasshoppers, and tadpoles. Heterotrophs that obtain their energy by eating other consumers are called carnivores. Carnivores that eat primary consumers are called secondary consumers. Secondary consumers include creatures such as lions, hawks, and rattlesnakes. Rarer are tertiary consumers: carnivores that eat secondary consumers. Animals such as bald eagles (Haliaeetus leucocephalus) can be tertiary consumers: algae (producers) living in lakes convert sunlight into glucose, zooplankton (primary consumers) eat the algae, fish (secondary consumers) eat the zooplankton, and eagles (tertiary consumers) eat the fish. We call these successive levels of organisms consuming one another trophic levels (from the Greek word which means nourishment ). The sequence of consumption from producers through tertiary consumers is known as a food chain. In a food chain, energy moves from one trophic level to the next. Printed Page 61 [Notes/Highlighting] Figure 3.5 Simple food chains. A simple food chain that links producers and consumers in a linear fashion illustrates how energy and matter move through the trophic levels of an ecosystem. A food chain helps us visualize how energy and matter move between trophic levels. However, species in natural ecosystems are rarely connected in such a simple, linear fashion. A more realistic type of model, shown in FIGURE 3.6, is known as a food web. Food webs take into account the complexity of nature, and they illustrate one of the most important concepts of ecology: that all species in an ecosystem are connected to one another.

4 Figure 3.6 A simplified food web. Food webs are more realistic representations of trophic relationships than simple food chains. They include scavengers, detritivores, and decomposers, and they recognize that some species feed at multiple trophic levels. Arrows indicate the direction of energy movement. Actual food webs are even more complex than this one. For instance, in an actual ecosystem, many more organisms are present. In addition, for simplicity, not all possible arrows are shown. Not all organisms fit neatly into a single trophic level. Some organisms, called omnivores, operate at several trophic levels. Omnivores include grizzly bears, which eat berries and fish, and the Venus flytrap (Dionaea muscipula), which can photosynthesize and also digests insects that become trapped in its leaves. In addition, each trophic level eventually produces dead individuals and waste products that feed other organisms. Scavengers are carnivores, such as vultures, that consume dead animals. Detritivores are organisms, such as dung beetles, that specialize in breaking down dead tissues and waste products (referred to as detritus) into smaller particles. These particles can then be further processed by decomposers: the fungi and bacteria that complete the breakdown process by recycling the nutrients

5 from dead tissues and wastes back into the ecosystem. Without scavengers, detritivores, and decomposers, there would be no way of recycling organic matter and energy, and the world would rapidly fill up with dead plants and animals. Previous Section Next Section

6 3.2.3 Ecosystem Productivity The amount of energy available in an ecosystem determines how much life the ecosystem can support. For example, the amount of sunlight that reaches a lake surface determines how much algae can live in the lake. In turn, the amount of algae determines the number of zooplankton the lake can support, and the size of the zooplankton population determines the number of fish the lake can support. Printed Page 63 [Notes/Highlighting] If we wish to understand how ecosystems function, or how to manage and protect them, it is important to understand where the energy in an ecosystem comes from and how it is transferred through food webs. To do this, environmental scientists look at the total amount of solar energy that the producers in an ecosystem capture via photosynthesis over a given amount of time. This measure is known as the gross primary productivity (GPP) of the ecosystem. Note that the term gross, as used here, indicates the total amount of energy captured by producers. In other words, GPP does not subtract the energy lost when the producers respire. The energy captured minus the energy respired by producers is the ecosystem s net primary productivity (NPP): NPP = GPP respiration by producers You can think of GPP and NPP in terms of a paycheck. GPP is like the total amount your employer pays you. NPP is the actual amount you take home after taxes are deducted. GPP is essentially a measure of how much photosynthesis is occurring over some amount of time. Determining GPP is a challenge for scientists because a plant rarely photosynthesizes without simultaneously respiring. However, if we can determine the rate of photosynthesis and the rate of respiration, we can use this information to calculate GPP. We can determine the rate of photosynthesis by measuring the compounds that participate in the reaction. So, for example, we can measure the rate at which CO 2 is taken up during photosynthesis and the rate at which CO 2 is produced during respiration. A common approach to measuring GPP is to first measure the production of CO 2 in the dark. Because no photosynthesis occurs in the dark, this measure eliminates CO 2 uptake by photosynthesis. Next, we measure the uptake of CO 2 in sunlight. This measure gives us the net movement of CO 2 when respiration and photosynthesis are both occurring. By adding the amount of CO 2 produced in the dark to the amount of CO 2 taken up in the sunlight, we can determine the gross amount of CO 2 that is taken up during photosynthesis: CO 2 taken up during photosynthesis = CO 2 taken up in sunlight + CO 2 produced in the dark In this way, we can derive the GPP of an ecosystem per day within a given area. We can give our answer in units of kilograms of carbon taken up per square meter per day (kg C/m 2 /day).

7 Converting sunlight into chemical energy is not an efficient process. As FIGURE 3.7 shows, of the total amount of solar energy that reaches the producers in an ecosystem the sunlight on a pond surface, for example only about 1 percent, on average, is converted into chemical energy via photosynthesis. Most of that solar energy is lost from the ecosystem as heat that returns to the atmosphere. Some of the lost energy consists of wavelengths of light that producers cannot absorb. Those wavelengths are either reflected from the surfaces of producers or pass through their tissues. The NPP of ecosystems ranges from 25 to 50 percent of GPP, or as little as 0.25 percent of the solar energy striking the plant. Clearly, it takes a lot of energy to conduct photosynthesis. Let s look at the math. On average, of the 1 percent of the Sun s energy that is captured by a producer (its individual GPP), about 60 percent is used to fuel the producer s respiration. The remaining energy (its individual NPP) is about 40 percent of the original 1 percent (see FIGURE 3.7). This 40 percent can be used to support the producer s growth and reproduction. A forest in North America, for example, might have a GPP of 2.5 kg C/m 2 /year and lose 1.5 kg C/m 2 /year to respiration by the plants in the forest. Because NPP = GPP respiration, the NPP of the forest is 1 kg C/m 2 /year (1.8 pounds C/yard 2 /year). This means that the plants living in 1 m 2 of forest will add 1 kg of carbon to their tissues every year by means of growth and reproduction. So, in this example, NPP is 40 percent of GPP. Measurement of NPP allows us to compare the productivity of different ecosystems, as shown in FIGURE 3.8. It is perhaps not surprising that producers grow best in ecosystems where they have plenty of sunlight, lots of available water and nutrients, and warm temperatures, such as tropical rainforests and salt marshes, which are the most productive ecosystems on Earth. Conversely, producers grow poorly in the cold regions of the Arctic, dry deserts, and the dark regions of the deep sea. In general, the greater the productivity of an ecosystem, the more primary consumers can be supported. Figure 3.7 Gross and net primary productivity. Producers typically capture only about 1 percent of available solar energy via photosynthesis. The energy they capture (gross primary productivity, or GPP) can be divided into energy used for the producers respiration and energy available for the producers growth and reproduction (net primary productivity, or NPP).

8 Figure 3.8 Net primary productivity varies among ecosystems. Productivity is highest where temperatures are warm and water and solar energy are abundant. As a result, NPP varies tremendously among different areas of the world. [After R. H. Whittaker and G. E. Likens, Primary production: The biosphere and man, Human Ecology 1 (1973): ] Measuring NPP is also a useful way to measure change in an ecosystem. For example, after a drastic change alters an ecosystem, the amount of stored energy (NPP) tells us whether the new system is more or less productive than the previous system. Previous Section Next Section

9 3.2.4 Energy Transfer Efficiency and Trophic Pyramids Printed Page 64 [Notes/Highlighting] The energy in an ecosystem can be measured in terms of biomass, which is the total mass of all living matter in a specific area. The net primary productivity of an ecosystem its NPP establishes the rate at which biomass is produced over a given amount of time. To analyze the productivity of an ecosystem, scientists calculate the biomass of all individuals accumulated over a given amount of time. The amount of biomass present in an ecosystem at a particular time is its standing crop. It is important to differentiate standing crop, which measures the amount of energy in a system at a given time, from productivity, which measures the rate of energy production over a span of time. For example, slow-growing forests have low productivity; the trees add only a small amount of biomass through growth and reproduction each year. However, the standing crop of long-lived trees the biomass of trees that has accumulated over hundreds of years is quite high. In contrast, the high growth rates of algae living in the ocean make them extremely productive. But because primary consumers eat these algae so rapidly, the standing crop of algae at any particular time is relatively low. Not all of the energy contained in a particular trophic level is in a usable form. Some parts of plants are not digestible and are excreted by primary consumers. Secondary consumers such as owls consume the muscles and organs of their prey, but they cannot digest bones and hair. Of the food that is digestible, some fraction of the energy it contains is used to power the consumer s day-to-day activities, including moving, eating, and (for birds and mammals) maintaining a constant body temperature. That energy is ultimately lost as heat. Any energy left over may be converted into consumer biomass by growth and reproduction and thus becomes available for consumption by organisms at the next higher trophic level. The proportion of consumed energy that can be passed from one trophic level to another is referred to as ecological efficiency. Ecological efficiencies are fairly low: they range from 5 to 20 percent and average about 10 percent across all ecosystems. In other words, of the total biomass available at a given trophic level, only about 10 percent can be converted into energy at the next higher trophic level. We can represent the distribution of biomass among trophic levels using a trophic pyramid, like the one for the Serengeti ecosystem shown in FIGURE 3.9. Trophic pyramids tend to look similar across ecosystems. Most energy (and biomass) is found at the producer level, and energy (and biomass) decrease as we move up the pyramid. The Serengeti ecosystem offers a good example of Figure 3.9 Trophic pyramid for the Serengeti ecosystem. This trophic pyramid represents the amount of energy that is present at each trophic level, measured in joules (J). While this pyramid assumes 10 percent

10 a trophic pyramid. The biomass of producers (grasses and shrubs) is much greater than the biomass of primary consumers (such as gazelles, wildebeests, and zebras) for which the producers serve as food. Likewise, the biomass of primary consumers is much greater than the biomass of secondary consumers (such as lions and cheetahs). The flow of energy between trophic levels helps to determine the population sizes of the various species within each trophic level. As we saw earlier in this chapter, the number of primary consumers in an area is generally higher than that of the carnivores they sustain. The principle of ecological efficiency also has implications for the human diet. For example, if all humans were to act only as primary consumers that is, become vegetarians we would harvest much more energy from any given area. How would this work? Suppose an acre of cropland could produce 1,000 kg of soybeans. This food could feed humans directly. Or, if we assume 10 percent ecological efficiency, it could be fed to cattle to produce approximately 100 kg of meat. In terms of biomass, there would be 10 times more food available for humans acting as primary consumers by eating soybeans than for humans acting as secondary consumers by eating beef. However, 1 kg of soybeans actually contains about 2.5 times as many calories as 1 kg of beef. Therefore, 1 acre of land would produce 25 times more calories when used for soybeans than when used for beef. In general, when we act as secondary consumers, the animals we eat require land to support the producers they consume. When we act as primary consumers, we require only the land necessary to support the producers we eat. ecological efficiency, actual ecological efficiencies range from 5 to 20 percent across different ecosystems. For most ecosystems, graphing the numbers of individuals or biomass within each trophic level would produce a similar pyramid. CHECKPOINT Why is photosynthesis an important process? What determines the productivity of an ecosystem? How efficiently is energy transferred between trophic levels in an ecosystem? Previous Section Next Section

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